This application claims priority under the Paris Convention to CN201711141498.3 filed on Nov. 14, 2017, titled Method and System for Automated Storing and Retrieving of Merchandise, and to CN2017111135812.7 filed on Nov. 14, 2017, titled Robotics, the entire content of both applications being incorporated herein in their entirety.
The present disclosure relates generally to warehouse automation systems, and more specifically to automated guided vehicle (AGV) designed to carry, store, and retrieve inventory items in a warehouse.
Machines have been used in warehouses to carry goods from storage to loading dock, or vice versa. At the beginning, machines were mostly used to carry heavy cargos or bulky items to free humans from exhaustive labor. Recent developments in Artificial Intelligence and robotics have produced advanced machines that are looking to replace humans not just in industrial settings but also in many areas of daily life.
While there are many reports of advancement in automation and AI, precision and agility still are two areas in which robotics lags behind human. In a warehouse setting, a fully automated machine that can take an order, go and fetch an item from storage and deliver the item to a designated place is more science fiction than reality. Certain well-known systems, such as KIVA systems, can accomplish simple mechanical movements of carrying bulky shelves from one designated location to another. However, functions of a fully automated system, such as fetching an inventory item from a specified shelf and putting an inventory item away into storage while being able to navigate through a crowded warehouse full of obstacles and capable of handling inventory items that have shifted positions, have yet to be realized in a commercially available warehouse robotic system.
Accordingly, one of the objectives of the present disclosure is to teach an intelligent automated guided vehicle that can store and retrieve inventory items as instructed. The AGV systems disclosed herein are agile, efficient and error-tolerant, and are especially suited to be used in a warehouse lined with storage shelves.
In some embodiments, an Automated Guided Vehicle (AGV) designed for storing or retrieving inventory items as disclosed comprises a drive unit, a multi-level frame, and a material handling device. The drive unit is configured to drive the AGV. In some embodiments, the drive unit may comprise a motor and one or more drive wheels. In some embodiments, the multi-level frame includes one or more plates for holding one or more inventory items. The multi-level frame also includes a lifting device for lifting the material handling device. The material handling device includes a tray, a retractable device, and a lateral device. The tray is configured to hold an inventory item. The retractable device is connected to the tray and is configured to extend and retract. The lateral device is configured to move the tray to either the right side or the left side. As the retractable device extends, the retractable device reaches inside a shelf, to either place an item on the shelf or fetch an item from the shelf. In one embodiment, as the retractable device retracts, the lateral device returns to its original place. In another embodiment, the lateral device may return with a piece of inventory item picked up from the shelf and place the inventory item on one of the plates of the multi-level frame. The AGV is configured to move between two warehouse shelves and to store or retrieve inventory items from either shelve using the material handling device.
In some embodiments, the multi-level frame is installed on the drive unit and the multi-level frame comprises supporting columns to accommodate the lifting device. The lifting device may be configured to move along the supporting columns and stop at each level of the multi-level frame. The lifting device may be configured to lift the material handling device to a height to store or retrieve an inventory item at or from a warehouse shelf. The height may be determined based on the position of the inventory item. The height may also be determined based on the position of one of the plates on the multi-level frame. When the material handling device is lifted to the height of the plate, the material handling device is configured to place an inventory item on the plate through retraction of the retractable device, or to fetch an inventory item from a shelf through extension of the retractable device. In some embodiments, the retractable device can extend to two or more positions. In one embodiment, the lateral device of the material handling device is configured to rotate the tray to either the right or left side by 90°. In another embodiment, the lateral device of the material handling device is configured to translate the tray to the right side or the left side. In some embodiments, the material handling device is configured to extend to the second position after turning 90° in order to reach inside a shelf.
In some embodiments, the AGV further comprises a transceiver for transmitting and receiving instructions to or from a warehouse server, and processors configured to control the AGV. The transceiver is configured to receive an instruction to transport an inventory item. The processors are configured to interpret the instruction to obtain a position of the inventory item. In one embodiment, the position of the inventory item comprises an x-coordinate, a y-coordinate, an orientation of the inventory item, and a height.
In some embodiments, the AGV comprises a navigation unit configured to detect obstacles and determine a moving path for the AGV based on the position of the inventory item. The navigation unit may be configured to read navigation signs posted inside the warehouse for navigation purpose. Examples of navigation signs may include barcodes, two-dimensional barcodes, and other identification codes.
In one embodiment, when the AGV is navigating toward the position of the inventory item, the processors are configured to command the material handling device to move to the height specified in the position of the inventory item, before the AGV reaches the position of the inventory item.
In one embodiment, the retractable device of the material handling device extends the tray to reach the inventory item when the AGV reaches the position of the inventory item. In one embodiment, the tray is configured to clamp the inventory item to move the inventory item onto or away from the tray. In another embodiment, the tray is configured to slide underneath the inventory item and lift the inventory item. The tray may further comprise some mechanism to facilitate pushing or pulling of the inventory item. For example, the tray may be equipped with a mechanical arm or fork that can open or fold to clamp, pull, or lift the item.
In some embodiments, the AGV further comprises a shift detection device configured to detect a position shift of the inventory item compared to the position obtained from the instruction received by the AGV. Based on the position shift, the processors are configured to adjust the position of the AGV or the position of the material handling device to allow the material handling device to reach the inventory item for transportation. The shift detection device may use one or more of the following: a laser device, a radar device, a lighting device, a barcode reader, and a graph recognition device, for detecting the position shift.
In some embodiment, an Automated Guided Vehicle (AGV) system for storing or retrieving an inventory item in a warehouse may comprise a drive unit configured to drive the AGV, a multi-level frame comprising one or more plates for holding one or more inventory items and a lifting device. The AGV may further comprise a material handling device, a transceiver, and one or more processors. The material handling device may further comprise a tray, a retractable device, and a lateral device. The tray is for holding an inventory item. The lateral device is configured to move the tray in a lateral direction, either to the right side or left side of the AGV system. The retractable device is configured to extend and retract perpendicular to the lateral direction. In some embodiments, the lateral device rotates the tray either to the left or to the right. In some embodiments, the lateral device translates the tray parallelly either to the left or to the right. The transceiver is configured for communicating with a warehouse server and the one or more processors are configured to control the AGV. The AGV system is configured to navigate inside a warehouse between storage shelves and to reach inside storage shelves laterally. The lifting device of the multi-level frame is configured to move the material handling device vertically and to stop at each level of the multi-level frame or at a specified height. In one embodiment, the lateral device of the material handling device is configured to rotate the lifting device by 90° to the right side or left side.
In some embodiments, the transceiver is configured to receive an instruction of transporting an inventory item and the one or more processors are configured to obtain the position of the inventory item from the received instruction.
In some embodiments, the AGV system may further include a shift detection device for detecting a position shift of the inventory item. The one or more processors are configured to adjust, based on the position shift, the position of the AGV and the position of the lifting device to allow the material device to reach the inventory item for transportation. The shift detection device may use one or more of the following devices: a laser device, a radar device, a lighting device, a barcode reader, and a graph recognition device, for detecting the position shift.
The present disclosure further discloses a method of controlling a warehouse robot to store or retrieve an inventory item on a shelf. The method comprises the following steps. First, the warehouse robot receives an instruction to transport the inventory item. The robot obtains a position of the inventory item from the received instruction. The position of the inventory item comprises a location of the inventory item and an orientation of the inventory item. After interpreting the instruction, the warehouse robot moves to the location of the inventory item. Before reaching for the inventory item, the warehouse robot may try to detect a position shift of the inventory item away from the obtained position. The position shift may include a deviation in the location and/or a change of the orientation of the inventory item and/or a bias of height. In some embodiments, the processors are configured to report the position shift to a server. If there is a position shift, the warehouse robot adjusts its position and/or the position of the material handling device. In some embodiments, the warehouse robot may adjust itself to compensate the orientation and/or position and/or height shift of the inventory item. After the position shift has been compensated, the warehouse robot reaches for the inventory item and retrieves it from storage shelf. The warehouse robot then transports the inventory item to a destination. When the warehouse robot reaches inside the shelf to place or fetch the inventory item, the lateral device of the material handling device moves in a lateral direction, therefore the warehouse robot does not need to turn around to face the shelf before reaching for the inventory item.
In some embodiments, the adjusting of the position of the warehouse robot to compensate for the position includes the following steps: comparing the position shift to a threshold; if the position shift is larger than the threshold, adjusting the position of the warehouse robot based on the position shift; re-measuring the position shift; and adjusting the position of the warehouse robot until the measured position shift is smaller than the threshold.
In some embodiments, the shelves used in a warehouse may allow two or more rows of inventory items to be arranged on the shelves. In such warehouse, a warehouse robot and the position information stored for each inventory item are modified or adapted to accommodate double-row deep shelves. In a method of controlling a warehouse robot to store or retrieve an inventory item placed on such shelf, the warehouse robot first receives an instruction to transport the first inventory item. The instruction may include the position of the first inventory item such as the location, the depth, and the orientation of the first inventory item. If the depth of the first inventory item indicates that the item is in the front row of the shelf, the robot's fetching process is the same as previously described. If the depth of the first inventory item indicates that the item is at the back row of the shelf, the robot's fetching process may require the robot to remove the inventory item in the front row in order to reach to the first inventory item in the back row. In some configurations, the robot is configured to take the second inventory item in the front row and place it on one of its empty trays, and then fetch the first inventory item from the back row and place it on another of its empty trays. After that, the robot returns the front row item to the front row. Indeed, if the robot is instructed to fetch both the first and second inventory items and they happen to be at the same location but in different rows, the robot doesn't need to return the second inventory item back to the shelf.
These and other features of the present disclosure will become readily apparent upon further review of the following specification and drawings. In the drawings, like reference numerals designate corresponding parts throughout the views. Moreover, components in the drawings are not necessarily drawn to scale, the emphasis instead being placed upon clearly illustrating the principles of the present disclosure.
Embodiments of the disclosure are described more fully hereinafter with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which preferred embodiments of the disclosure are shown. The various embodiments of the disclosure may, however, be embodied in many different forms and should not be construed as limited to the embodiments set forth herein. Rather, these embodiments are provided so that this disclosure will be thorough and complete, and will fully convey the scope of the disclosure to those skilled in the art.
In referring to
The two synchronous wheel drive sets 343 are installed on the supporting columns 315. In some embodiments, the lifting device 124 may include more than two synchronous wheel drive sets 343. As shown in
The drive unit 110 is laid open in
The base 422 has two surfaces, an upper surface 421 and an under surface 420. On the upper surface 421 of the base 422, the shaft seat 415 and the shock absorber bracket 425 are used to accommodate two driving wheels 413 through the driving wheel socket 423 and the installation socket 424. The installation socket 424 is in the middle of the base 422 and the two driving wheels 413 are underneath the installation socket 424 supporting the base 422. Four driven wheels 412 are also installed in the four corners of the base 422 to provide support and ease of movement. The four driven wheels 412 are installed in the driven wheel sockets 426. In some embodiments, there may be more than four or fewer than four driven wheels. The driven wheels may be omni-directional wheels or other types of steering wheels.
As shown in
In
In
The arm 632 is configured to retract or extend along the slides 610 and to move the tray 633 along the S6 axis. The arm 632 comprises a telescopic arm 636 and a pusher assembly 637 that are used to accomplish the movements of retraction and extension.
In
In
As mentioned above, the material handling device 130 can be configured to rotate the tray 633 or translate the tray 633 in order to achieve the lateral movement in the process of storing or retrieving an inventory item. In a crowded warehouse where storage shelves are arranged in rows, a material handling device 130 that can reach inside a storage shelf with lateral movements is particularly advantageous. As the AGV 100 moves in between two storage shelves, the material handling device 130 can either rotate the tray 633 or translate the tray 633 to either the right side or left side without turning the entire AGV 100. Because the AGV 100 does not require space for turning, the space between the shelves can be as narrow as the width of the AGV 100. In this way, the AGV 100 requires less space than regular warehouse robots as it moves in between the shelves and picks up or put away inventory items.
The first angle sensor 716 and the second angle sensor 720 are positioned on the circumference of the driving gear 724 and separated by some distance. The two sensors are used to detect whether the tray 633 of the material handling device 130 has turned to a specific position. As the tray 633 is driven by the driving device 712, the first and second proximity switches 726, 728, move with the tray 633. By determining which of the first or second angle sensor 716 or 720 detects which of the first or second proximity switches 726 or 728 at what time, the amount of angle rotation by the tray 633 can be detected and controlled by the rotation controller.
In some embodiments, the rotation controller of
In
In referring to
When the AGV 100 reaches the location (step 902), it turns on the primary lighting equipment 641 (step 904). The AGV 100 attempts to read the identification code on the inventory item (step 906). In some embodiments, the identification code may be a two-dimensional bar code. In other embodiments, the identification code can be any bar code. When the AGV 100 is not able to read the identification code, the AGV 100 sends a report to the server and aborts the task (step 950). When the AGV 100 is able to recognize the identification code, it calculates a position shift of the inventory item (step 908).
The AGV 100 is configured to report the position shift it obtains for the inventory item to a server (step 910). The server is configured to use the position shift and the layout of the warehouse to determine the correct location of the inventory item (step 912). The server then updates its database with the correct location of the inventory item (step 914).
Based on the position shift, the AGV 100 further determines whether the material handling device 130 can reach straight to the inventory item from where the AGV 100 stands (step 924). If no, the AGV 100 further adjusts or finetunes the position of the material handling device 130 (step 932) and then extends the material handling device 130 (step 934) while moving the AGV 100 to slightly adjust the position or orientation of the inventory item (step 936). If yes, the AGV 100 also checks whether the tray 633 is within the pre-determined range (step 922). If not, the AGV 100 slightly adjusts where the AGV stands (920) and attempts to read the identification code again (step 906). If yes, the tray 633 is within the pre-determined range, the AGV 100 adjusts the position of the material handling device 130 and rotates the tray 633 (step 926). before reading the identification code again to determine whether the position shift is within a threshold (step 928). If the shift is within the threshold, the AGV 100 extends the material handling device 130 to reach out to the inventory item (step 930). If the position shift is not reasonable or within a pre-determined threshold, the AGV 100 extends the material handling device (step 934) to adjust the position of the AGV 100 and the position of the inventory item (step 936).
In some embodiments, the AGV 100 is configured to find and retrieve an inventory item that is hidden behind an object or another inventory item. The AGV 100 may be configured to receive an instruction from a server indicating the position of a first inventory item to be fetched. The position includes the location, depth and orientation of the first inventory item. The AGV 100 is configured to fetch the first inventory item from the back row of the shelf if there is no inventory item in the front row. If there is a second inventory item in the front row, the AGV 100 is configured to fetch the second inventory item and place the second inventory item on a first tray on the multi-level frame 120 that is empty. The AGV 100 then fetches the first inventory item and places the first inventory item on a second tray on the multi-level frame 120 that is empty. Having retrieved the first inventory item, the AGV 100 returns the second inventory item where it is stored on the shelf.
In some embodiments, the shelves used in a warehouse may allow two or more rows of inventory items to be placed or stored inside the shelves. In such warehouse, the AGV 100 and the position information stored for each inventory item are modified or adapted to accommodate double-row deep shelves. In a method of controlling the AGV 100 to store or retrieve an inventory item placed on such shelf, the AGV 100 first receives an instruction to transport the first inventory item. The instruction may include the position of the first inventory item such as the location, the depth, and the orientation of the first inventory item. If the depth of the first inventory item indicates that the item is in the front row of the shelf, the AGV 100's fetching process is the same as previously described. If the depth of the first inventory item indicates that the item is in the back row of the shelf, the AGV 100's fetching process may require the AGV 100 to remove the inventory item in the front row in order to reach to the first inventory item in the back row. In some configurations, the AGV 100 is configured to take the second inventory item in the front row and place it on one of its empty trays, and then fetch the first inventory item from the back row and place it on another of its empty trays. After that, the robot returns the front row item to the front row. Indeed, if the AGV 100 is instructed to fetch both the first and second inventory items and they happen to be at the same location but in different rows, the AGV 100 doesn't need to return the second inventory item back to the shelf.
In some embodiments, the AGV 100 is configured to detect a position shift of either the first or second inventory item and adjust the stance and position of the AGV 100, and also the position of the inventory item before reaching into the shelf to fetch the inventory item, first or second. In one embodiment, the AGV 100 may repeat the position adjustment process until the detected position shift is smaller than a threshold. In one embodiment, the AGV 100 is configured to report the position shift to a server to allow the server to update a map of the warehouse. The map of the warehouse may illustrate the layout, i.e., where the shelves are and where the inventory items are stored.
Although the disclosure is illustrated and described herein with reference to specific embodiments, the disclosure is not intended to be limited to the details shown. Rather, various modifications may be made in the details within the scope and range of equivalents of the claims and without departing from the disclosure.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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201711135812.7 | Nov 2017 | CN | national |
201711141498.3 | Nov 2017 | CN | national |
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PCT/CN2018/104652 | 9/7/2018 | WO |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2019/095803 | 5/23/2019 | WO | A |
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